Skip to content →

Pelican Yoga Posts

Flight, Coorong National Park: gulls (with musical bonus)

 

When an Australian thinks of seagulls, the relevant species is almost certainly our most common, emblematic one.

Chroicocephalus novaehollandiae – the Silver gullhas prospered mightily, post-1788.

Arguably, this highly-adaptable bird should no longer be described as a “seagull”.

Comments closed

Flight, Coorong National Park: Pelicans

 

One of the pleasures of Australian life is to look up and see pelicans “surfing the thermals”, soaring, spiralling ever-higher, with so very little apparent effort.

They are also wonderful to watch as they take off from water (or land on it); then, however, a great amount of effort is spectacularly evident.

Pelicans are one of “our” world’s largest, living, flying “machines”.

Comments closed

Word power: not-blind Fred on ‘22 election

 

It is worth remembering that these are the observations of a former senior Federal Government Minister, also – in Opposition – a Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party, and that he departed Parliament at a time of his own choosing, as one of its more widely-respected members.

A government that must deal with sensible independent centrists is better than a government that must rely on the support of the most eccentric ends of its party spectrum.

One Comment

Waychinicup waters (“Aspects of Waychinicup” # 24)

 

Waychinicup’s inlet is shallow and sheltered.

It is also dynamic, healthy, and reliably well-watered; low rainfall sometimes turns off the freshwater “tap” (i.e inflow from the Waychinicup River) but ocean waves and tides ensure that this inlet is constantly flushed/refreshed.

Comments closed

Inlet’s western shoreline (“Aspects of Waychinicup” #22)

 

The photo was taken at 1.57 pm on 15 March 2021, a little less than one hour before the one in #21 of this series.

#21 offered a telephoto view, focused on Waychinicup Inlet’s eastern shoreline, as viewed from midway along the inlet’s western side.

#22’s is a wide-angle (24mm) view, taken from the inlet’s northwest “corner”; it looks along the inlet’s western side, out to where the Southern Ocean meets the inlet.

Comments closed